site_archiver@lists.apple.com Delivered-To: darwin-kernel@lists.apple.com -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 On Jan 8, 2007, at 5:41 PM, Greg wrote: - Greg On Jan 8, 2007, at 6:17 PM, Greg Miller wrote: G~ Like I said, I'm trying to send the kernel variable length data of around 50 bytes. I am using the IOKit but I would also like to know how to do this without it. Is there any documentation on this? I would really prefer to avoid blindly going through header files. - Greg On Jan 8, 2007, at 3:15 PM, Josh Graessley wrote:
This depends on what you are trying to communicate with in the kernel. If you are already using IOKit, I would imagine an IOUserClient would be the way to go. If you're writing a non-IOKit kext, you may want to look in to a kernel control socket (sys/ kern_control.h).
-josh
On Jan 7, 2007, at 6:40 PM, Greg wrote:
Hi, what is the best way(s) to send variable length data (around 50 bytes or so) to a kernel extension from a user-land application? Are there different ways to do this if the kext uses the IOUserClient schema to talk to user-land apps? If you could also point me to documentation or a tutorial on how to do this I would be much obliged!
Thanks,
Brian Bergstrand <http://www.bergstrand.org/brian/> PGP Key ID: 0xB6C7B6A2 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.5 (Darwin) iD8DBQFFotzdedHYW7bHtqIRAmI5AKDCYEhYQLuutfXymWbA2TNMJt114wCg81qa 4bWZYkEPhRifL2tebI39JTQ= =qi/Q -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- _______________________________________________ Do not post admin requests to the list. They will be ignored. Darwin-kernel mailing list (Darwin-kernel@lists.apple.com) Help/Unsubscribe/Update your Subscription: http://lists.apple.com/mailman/options/darwin-kernel/site_archiver%40lists.a... There is no "correct" way. There are ways that make more "sense" given your current setup, but that's about it. If you want bi- directional communication and you are already an IOKit kext, the easiest method will be an IOUserClient nub (as Josh already stated). You could also easily use a kernel control socket or memory mapping (from personal experience, the former is a tad easier than the latter because of certain kernel restrictions on mapping memory from userland into the kernel). Also from personal experience, sysctls and ioctls do not make for easy bi-directional communication channels. Sorry for the followup, but perhaps somebody could just advice me on a specific method. That document does provide details for the sysctl API but skims over memory-mapping and a few others. Apple provides an IODataQueue example but that is only for kernel -
user-client communication, I'm not exactly sure how I would reverse that direction. However, it seems that sysctl is a viable option for my purposes. It does seem to be able to handle variable length data of moderate size, I guess I'll just use that. The reason for my confusion is simply the shear number of options and the rather sparse documentation on them; I'm just trying to find the "correct" way of doing this... Take a look at the document at
http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Darwin/Conceptual/ KernelProgramming/boundaries/chapter_14_section_1.html#//apple_ref/ doc/uid/TP30000905-CH217-DontLinkElementID_9 On 1/8/07, Greg <greg@kinostudios.com> wrote: This email sent to site_archiver@lists.apple.com